Thursday, March 26, 2015

Dorie Greenspan's Easy Almond Cake #recipe @LucyBurdette

LUCY BURDETTE: You saw the meatloaf I made last week for a friend's "new job, new life" celebration. I wanted to make a cake too, but nothing too labor intensive.

Sometimes
the idea of what to make comes together by happenstance. In this
instance, I was browsing through the cookbook my daughter gave me for
Christmas, Dorie Greenspan's BAKING CHEZ MOI. And there I saw a simple
almond cake. And then in the grocery store I found a bag of Bob's Red
Mill ground almond flour. The coincidence could not be ignored (as often
happens in a mystery novel too.)

This cake has few ingredients and isn't much trouble, unless you are
wrestling with your oven temperature as I have been. My oven was a
little too hot and the top browned too quickly so I had to take it out
earlier than I would have liked. Hence the cake was a little flat,
though still delicious. I bet yours will look even better!

When the eggs are at room temperature and nicely separated, whisk the
yolks with the sugar, holding back 2 tablespoons to whip with the
whites. When the yolks are light and thick, mix in the
vanilla extract.

In the bowl of a stand mixer or in a clean metal bowl,
beat the whites with the salt for about a minute. Sprinkle the remaining
2 tablespoons of sugar over the top and continue to beat until the whites
stand up, stopping before they get completely stiff.

Mix a quarter of the whites into the yolk mixture. Then stir that mixture in with the rest of the whites and sprinkle half of the almond
flour over top. Now mix everything together gently, add the remaining almond flour and again, mix thoroughly but gently.

Scrape the batter into a prepared 9 inch cake pan. (You will have
buttered the bottom and sides of the pan, then covered the bottom with
parchment paper, and buttered that too.)

Shake the batter gently so it
settles. Bake at 350 degrees for approximately 30 minutes. The top
should be browning and the sides pulling away from the pan. The top
should spring back after being touched.

Let the cake rest for five
minutes on a rack, then run a knife around the edge and invert the pan
onto a plate. Remove the parchment paper and allow it to cool. I served
this with mango purée, fresh mangoes and ice cream of the diner's choice. It was light and delicious, thank you to Dorie! It also tasted great plain the next day--with a subtle nutty taste and texture.

When she's not eating, cooking, or blogging, Lucy Burdette writes the Key West food critic mystery series.Fatal Reservations, the sixth book in the series, will be in bookstores on July 7, but you can certainly order it now!